That was not my intention. I consciously avoided anything similar to the Third Reich. I really didn't think the story of the Mormon pioneers was all that horrific for most people, and I figured segregation was both mild enough (it was terribly unfair, but not gut-wrenchingly brutal) and far enough removed in time that most people would not be unduly influenced by the mere mention of it. If you can think of better examples of things that were legal but still blatantly wrong, I'll make sure to file them away for later use.
But I don't think taking out the logical explanation and turning the comment into a baseless assertion would improve it. Clearly what I was saying is non-obvious to some people (or I wouldn't have had to say it), and without any justifying logic, the only people who would come out agreeing with me are those who went in that way. My intent was to persuade, not preach to the choir.
It's tough to come up with some better examples for me. I see your point. Every example seems to have seriously charged aspects (sexism, racism, violence, etc.) I just react negatively when people use emotionally charged examples in a discussion.
I'm not so sure it was a logical explanation of anything other than your thought process. Just because there were previous examples where things were legal but unethical does not mean it applies here.
Still, I'm glad we worked through this. I've learned from it. Didn't mean to sound as critical as I came off -- if it bothered you, my apologies, that wasn't my intention.
Thanks to both of you guys for the interesting exercise in thought.
But I don't think taking out the logical explanation and turning the comment into a baseless assertion would improve it. Clearly what I was saying is non-obvious to some people (or I wouldn't have had to say it), and without any justifying logic, the only people who would come out agreeing with me are those who went in that way. My intent was to persuade, not preach to the choir.